Toronto Star

Liberals vow budget ice to cool off hot house prices

Sousa says he has ‘options’ in bid to make GTA housing affordable

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

Attention hard-pressed homebuyers: Finance Minister Charles Sousa is promising help in his spring budget to make houses and condos more affordable.

Disappoint­ed that last week’s federal fiscal blueprint didn’t take immediate steps to cool the GTA’s overheated market, Sousa said Monday that Ontario will go it alone in the fight against bidding wars, fast-rising prices and rents.

“There is a suite of options, and we want to put a package together that meets that,” Sousa said.

He has not yet announced a date for the budget – “it’s not complete, yet” – but it is expected within weeks.

The average price of a detached home in Toronto is more than $1.5 million.

This has heightened concerns that firsttime buyers and young families cannot buy without taking on huge mortgages, thereby putting themselves at risk if interest rates spike.

Speculatio­n has centred on a foreign-buyers’ tax, but Sousa has said any measures must avoid “unintended consequenc­es” that could slow the housing market in areas outside Toronto and Hamilton where sales aren’t as inflated.

The real estate industry has complained there isn’t enough new supply of homes coming on the market to keep prices in check, and this has resulted in bidding wars and fierce competitio­n for rental accommodat­ion.

“Demand is high for a number of factors,” Sousa said.

“Could be speculator­s. Could be people from outside the country. It could very well be the many who are now moving into Ontario, creating that demand,” he added.

“The degree of supply is in question and how to expedite that is also something we’re trying to address.”

In a report last week, TD Bank said prices are expected to rise between 20 per cent and 25 per cent this year, and “at roughly 3 per cent to 5 per cent in 2018.”

One thing Sousa cannot do in his budget is what he asked of the federal government: impose higher capitalgai­ns taxes on the sale of homes that are not main residences.

Such a measure would hit speculator­s who buy and flip houses and condos for quick profits as prices skyrocket.

Sousa proposed raising the capitalgai­ns inclusion rate from 50 per cent to limit the amount that the party flipping the property can pocket.

“That was one aspect that I thought should be considered,” Sousa said last week.

He maintained his hope that his federal counterpar­t, Bill Morneau, may take action at some point.

“I’m going to take solace in the fact that we’re having ongoing discussion­s with the federal government,” he added. “We do need something soon, especially given the market conditions that we’re under.”

Toronto Mayor John Tory has expressed concerns about the housing market, which is also driven by current low borrowing costs and the low inventory of homes, as many people choose to renovate their homes or add a second storey to them.

A report by Ryerson University’s City Building Institute earlier this month urged a foreign-buyers’ tax or a progressiv­e property tax to cool the market.

“As housing bubbles are allowed to expand, many are hurt or drawn into unsustaina­ble financial situations. This is particular­ly the case for young Torontonia­ns,” the report cautioned.

“When housing bubbles unwind, there is major collateral damage, and people are hurt through little or no fault of their own. And the historical record is that they do unwind, essentiall­y without fail.”

As bubbles burst, homeowners who overbid are left paying a mortgage on a home that can be worth tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars less than the amount they paid.

 ?? FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Many factors are spiking demand, Finance Minister Charles Sousa said.
FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Many factors are spiking demand, Finance Minister Charles Sousa said.

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